Print Edition of The Observer for Wednesday, March 20, 2019

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Volume 53, Issue 100 | wednesday, march 20, 2019 | ndsmcobserver.com

Political leaders speak at ND Former secretaries of state Condoleezza Rice, John Kerry come to campus By COURTNEY BECKER & TOBIAS HOONHOUT Senior News Writers

Two former secretaries of state, Republican Condoleezza Rice and Democrat John Kerry, came together in front of a sold-out auditorium in DeBartolo Performing Arts Center on Tuesday night to find common ground on issues including the United States’ role in foreign affairs, immigration policy and America’s future. Rice — the 64th secretary of state who served under President George W. Bush and received her master’s degree from Notre Dame in 1975 — and Kerry — the 66th secretary under President Barack Obama — were brought to campus by the Common Ground

Committee, a non-partisan organization that offers a platform for public figures to reach across the aisle to discuss policy considerations. On-campus partners for the event included BridgeND, the Rooney Center for the Study of American Democracy and the Notre Dame International Security Center. Kerry first addressed Trump’s decision to pull out of agreements such as the Paris Climate Agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Iran Deal, agreements Kerry worked on during his time as secretary of state. Kerry said Trump “made a blanket decision to pull out of” these deals rather than attempting to improve them, which he thinks would have been a better

course of action. “Look, if you want to make them better, make them better. But he hasn’t made anything better,” Kerry said. “ … I think if you’re the world’s greatest negotiator, you negotiate.” Rice voiced a different view from Kerry’s on Trump’s decision to withdraw from various deals. “I want to get to the basic question of why we are seeing this pulling away from the liberal order,” she said. “Because I think, in this sense, the president is — in many ways — a symptom of a larger problem that we globalizers have. Now, to be very clear: I am a staunch defender, as John is, of the liberal order that we created. … Somewhere along the way, those of us who believe in the

New book explores Hesburgh’s contributions By THERESA OLOHAN News Writer

A new book shedding light on parts of University President Emeritus Fr. Theodore Hesburgh’s life previously unknown has hit the shelves. Written by Notre Dame professor of history Fr. Wilson Miscamble and published March 12, “American Priest: The Ambitious Life and Conflicted Legacy of Notre

Dame’s Father Ted Hesburgh,” explores the many roles and contributions of Hesburgh. A Notre Dame faculty member since 1988, Miscamble said he wrote the book in order to gain a better understanding of Notre Dame’s evolution under Hesburgh’s influence, whose contributions range from higher education, to the civil rights movement and to his work as an advisor to popes and presidents.

News Writer

Saint Mary’s Office for Civic Engagement (OSCE) hosted the first of a three-part discussion series about women, mothers and their roles in society Tuesday evening. Tuesday’s event focused on the idea of being a Woman, Mother and Image Bearer, with guest panelists Ramal Winfield, Noelle Gunn

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Elliott and Christan Sheltan, as well as a question and answer section led by Rebekah DeLine, the director of the OCSE. DeLine started the event by asking the panelists how they serve in the South Bend community as individuals and as families. “It’s really important to us because my oldest is seven and we’re trying to find ways to include him in understanding how

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see PANEL PAGE 4

Observer Staff Report

K.J. Martijn Cremers has been selected to be the new dean of the Mendoza College of Business by University president Fr. John Jenkins, the University announced in a press release Tuesday. Cremers, a professor of finance, has served as interim dean of the college since former dean Roger Huang stepped down in July. According to the release, Cremers was selected from several candidates after a six-month nationwide search. He will assume his new see MENDOZA PAGE 3

Professor’s app to explore muralism

“It was both a desire to understand the Notre Dame story and also to track something of these amazing involvements he had beyond Notre Dame,” Miscamble said. “I was curious about how Notre Dame had developed and evolved, and I thought a good way to understand that story would be to study the person who had led it for such a long period of see HESBURGH PAGE 3

SMC discussion series speaks on mother’s roles By EMMA AULT

liberal order have begun to lose support for it. And I think we have lost support for it among common people.” Both Kerry and Rice attributed the rise of populism to America’s shift, which has altered America’s role in international relations. “When the president of the United States stands up and says ‘America First,’ he’s articulating something that every president of the United States has always believed and always acted on,” Kerry said. “… But when you say it the way the president has said it and you put it out there in the way that he has promoted it … America loses credibility. And that is what has happened.”

Dean of college named

important service is to us. There are times in our life that with wrestling, soccer, piano that we are not able to do that,” Sheltan said. “Right now his little heart is pulled towards helping homeless people, so we’ve been making blessing bags and keep those with us. That’s a way for us to serve when we don’t really have the time to serve.” see MOTHERS PAGE 3

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Photo courtesy of James Sweet

A mural painted on a house in the Pilsen neighborhood in the lower west side of Chicago acts as a tie to the culture of many residents. By SOPHIA LAUBER News Writer

Hundreds of murals cover the walls of homes businesses, schools, public buildings and train stops in the Pilsen neighborhood in the lower west side of Chicago. The murals depict the culture of the large Mexican population that blossomed in Pilsen in the 1960s and continues to live

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there today. However, visitors to the National Museum of Mexican Art located in Pilsen may find that information on the murals is lacking. Associate professor of American Studies Jason Ruiz recently received a $50,000 grant from the Whiting Foundation, an organization that provides support see PILSEN PAGE 3

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